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  • Sin Enslaves, But God Is in the Emancipation Business

    Read: Rom. 6:20–23 Introduction Years ago there lived a devout Christian man who attended a sound, Bible believing church every Sunday of his life (as, by the way, every Christian should). His wife was an unbeliever. She didn’t attend. They had a verbal routine every Sunday afternoon when he arrived home. She asked him, “What… Continue reading

  • Daring Prayer

    Read: Jn. 4:46–54 Introduction About five years ago, God revived prayer at Cornerstone. Over that time, I’ve been stunned at how many prayers he’s answered. I should not have been stunned, because answered prayer should be routine for God’s people, but I’ve been stunned nonetheless. We simply cannot lose this momentum. Every day of my… Continue reading

  • Top 14 Movies of 2014

    Mud Gravity Captain Phillips We Steal Secrets Lone Survivor The World’s End Side Effects Star Trek: Into Darkness Ain’t Them Bodies Saints All Is Lost American Hustle The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug World War Z Iron Man 3 Continue reading

  • Christian Marriage Plain and Simple

    Read: Eph. 4:31–32 Introduction You might find strange that the biblical text doesn’t seem to relate specifically about marriage at all. Paul is giving the church general instructions, but he doesn’t say anything specifically at this point about the family or marriage, which is what I’m preaching about. So, what does this passage have to do… Continue reading

  • Baptism: Salvation by Judgment

    Read: 1 Pet. 3:18–22 I want to draw attention to Peter’s unique — striking, in fact — teaching on baptism. I’ve preached many, many times at our church about baptism, but somehow I think this is first time I’ve addressed this passage, which is a very important one. Peter has been addressing the topic of… Continue reading

  • John M. Frame’s Sola Scriptura Systematics

    Ever since John M. Frame’s systematic theology was released last November, I intended to promote and explain it for a wider audience, and Tom Chantry’s recent critique has furnished me a suitable opportunity. Did I say “critique”? It’s more like a bludgeoning: “[I]t is my firm opinion that John Frame is one of the most… Continue reading

  • God’s Blessing of Common Grace

    Read Acts 4:11–17 Introduction I’m preaching unusual messages both this week and next. You don’t often hear sermons these days on the topics I’m addressing, but the topics are important, and they’re biblical. One reason Christians don’t know about these topics is that their pastors don’t preach on them. Their pastors rob them of biblical… Continue reading

  • A Tale of Two Inequalities

    If one sentence summarized Pres. Barack Obama’s theme in his 2014 State of the Union address, it is “Inequality has deepened.” He stated: Today, after four years of economic growth, corporate profits and stock prices have rarely been higher, and those at the top have never done better.  But average wages have barely budged. But… Continue reading

  • Red-Letter Ethics (or, With Evangelicals Like These, Who Needs Marcion?)

    Daniel Kirk, NT prof at Fuller Seminary-Menlo Park and prototypical young evangelical scholar (translation: we young-uns can’t abide biblical evangelicalism), wants a Christocentric view of biblical authority. What evangelical doesn’t? But Professor Kirk lets us in on what his Christ-centered bibliology might look like in this comment: There are hundreds of ways in which the OT would… Continue reading

  • On Cuddly Debates in Postmodernity

    Tonight’s debate between Ken Ham (creationist) and Bill Nye (evolutionist) impelled Christianity Today to inquire, “Do Celebrity Debates Help Christian Persuasion?” The answer is “Not really, but they should.” Some “expert” respondents to the question highlighted (and decried) the “celebrity” angle, but, while evangelicalism is awash in celebrity problems, that’s not the chief problem here.  The chief problem… Continue reading

  • Standing on the (Cultural) Promises

    2013 was a culturally eventful year for the United States: the Supreme Court upheld principal provisions of the Affordable [sic] Care Act, otherwise known as Obamacare, just as it overturned principal provisions of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and California’s Prop 8, both of which defined marriage as between one man and one woman.… Continue reading

  • A Curse on Aborticide

    Every January many churches in the United States highlight God’s truth as it relates to preborn children, notably in memory of Roe v. Wade, the January 22, 1973 Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion. Actually the term abortion includes the definition of “the expulsion of a fetus from the uterus by natural causes before it is… Continue reading

  • The One People of God: Covenant as Jew and Gentile

    Introduction Cornerstone is a church, not a social club, not just a group of friends (though it is that, too). It’s a church. This first Sunday of 2014, on which we ordain and install a new officer, I feel led by the Holy Spirit to preach about the church. What is the church? The church… Continue reading

  • The Way of Greatness

    Then the mother of the sons of Zebedee came up to him with her sons, and kneeling before him she asked him for something. And he said to her, “What do you want?” She said to him, “Say that these two sons of mine are to sit, one at your right hand and one at… Continue reading

  • The 10 Best Books I’ve Read in the Last 10 Years

    1. Herman Dooyeewerd, Roots of Western Culture 2. Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow 3. Kenneth Minogue, The Servile Mind: How Democracy Erodes the Moral Life 4. Peter Gay, Modernism: The Lure of Heresy 5.  Michael Reeves, The Good God: Enjoying Father, Son and Spirit 6. Thomas Molnar, Utopia: The Perennial Heresy 7. Thomas Sowell, Intellectuals and Society 8.  John Oswalt, Called to be Holy 9. G. C. Berkouwer, Modern Uncertainty… Continue reading

  • Lifelong Faithfulness — Ours and God’s

    Text: 1 Samuel 12:1–5, 19—25 Introduction Sermonic Four factors have pressed me to preach about Samuel today. First, I’m reading through the Bible’s historical books, and I just re-read this story, and it always rivets my attention. Second, this is the last Sunday in 2013, and this is story conveys great truths for ending our year.… Continue reading

  • The Advent Logos

    1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2 He was in the beginning with God. 3 All things were made through him, and without him was not any thing made that was made. 4 In him was life, and the life was the light… Continue reading

  • Leftist Mockery of the Poor

    In his profound essay “A Taste for Danger,” Theodore Dalrymple comments on his growing disgust for middle- and upper-class younglings who delight to dress in the rags of poverty to show their “solidarity with the poor” as well as, not coincidentally, posturing as a self-referential moral rebuke to “the privileged.” Dalrymple observes that the vast… Continue reading

  • Virtue Demands Liberty (or, No, Putin Isn’t “One of Us”)

    Pat Buchanan is asking whether Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is “one of us.” “Us” denotes “paleo-conservatives,” which denotes, well, nobody’s entirely sure, but is a single iteration of a conservatism whose most notable distinctive as it relates to Putin is its … reaction against what was taking place in American culture itself in the… Continue reading

  • Christmas as a Christian Holy Day: And Why Secularists Have Successfully Attacked It

    But when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law, To redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons. Galatians 4:4-5 What is the origin of the Christmas holiday (Holy Day)?  Jesus’ birthday is obviously not… Continue reading